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Karen Greeley, RNNICU Nursing/Physician Disaster Coordinator, Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Adam Czynski, DONICU Attending, Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Theresa Doran, RNPICU Transport Team and Disaster Coordinator, Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Teri D. Reynolds, RN, MSN, MHA, CENEducator Specialist, Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Lights Out — Immersive NICU Disaster Simulation During a Power Outage
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Karen Greeley, RNNICU Nursing/Physician Disaster Coordinator, Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Karen Greeley is a registered nurse for Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), where she serves as a nurse managed transport specialist and the NICU disaster coordinator. Karen is involved in planning for the yearly Statewide Medical and Health Exercise, including the evacuation of a level three NICU in 2010 and functional exercise of the entire Children’s Hospital in 2011. Karen also created a design for new evacuation equipment for the premature and term NICU patient and worked to create the first Pediatric Disaster Reference Guide that bridges pre-hospital care for the sick newborn with critical care pediatric resources during a disaster. Karen was instrumental in assisting the California Association of Neonatologists in creating their new NICU Disaster Planning Toolkit.
Adam Czynski, DONICU AttendingLoma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Dr. Czynski is a neonatologist at Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital where he is in charge of disaster preparedness for the NICU and has been involved in further developing NICU-based disaster policies. Dr. Czynski is also an assistant professor of pediatrics at Loma Linda University Medical School. His research interests are in system analysis to improve disaster response and planning and team development through simulation. He obtained his medical degree from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, pediatric training at Virginia Commonwealth University/Medical College of Virginia, and his neonatal fellowship at Loma Linda Children’s Hospital. He sits on the graduate medical education committee for the American College of Osteopathic Pediatricians and is a content specialist for the American Osteopathic Board of Pediatrics.
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Theresa Doran, RNPICU Transport Team and Disaster CoordinatorLoma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Theresa is a pediatric critical care transport coordinator for Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital. She is has been a part of the transport team for 15 years. Theresa also has taken on the role of PICU Disaster Coordinator for the last five years. She has assisted in developing the pediatric surge and evacuation plans for Loma Linda University Children’s Hospital.
Teri D. Reynolds, RN, MSN, MHA, CENEducator SpecialistLoma Linda University Children’s Hospital
Teri Reynolds has been an educator at Loma Linda University Medical Simulation Center since 2009. Teri’s past experience includes fifteen years of emergency nursing, cardiac nursing and ICU nursing. During this time her roles included staff nurse, charge nurse and educator in the Level One Trauma Center. Teri’s heart lies in simulation and education. She is a member of the Society of Simulation in Health Care, the American Heart Association and the Emergency Nurses Association.
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Immersive NICU/PICU Disaster Simulation During a Power Outage
“LIGHTS OUT”
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Human Response When Disaster Strikes
• Chaos
• Unorganized
• Lack of leadership
• High stress environment
• Poor decision making
• Tornado
• Tsunami/Hurricane
• Wild Fires
• Earthquakes
• Terrorist attack, riots, bomb threats
• Labor dispute
• Technological (equipment failure)
• Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
• Hazardous Materials (toxic fumes)
• Mass Casualty Bus Accident
• Active shooter
• Power Outage**(Level 1 Trauma Center)
Are We at Risk?
Human Hazards Natural Hazards
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How do we Prepare Staff?
The Value of an Accurate Needs Assessment
• What do the learners know?
• What are the knowledge gaps?
• What worked? What didn’t…
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• Creating scenarios that mimic real life
• Tool to evaluate needs of the learner
• Debriefing to reinforce learning objectives
Simulation Training
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In the Past … What We Thought They Knew
Red backpacks
• HICS Forms• Nurse/Staff Roles• TRAIN/Triage
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Environment• Lighting
• Ventilators not working
Assess Patient• Airway
• Breathing
• Circulation
Scenario Learning Points
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• Leadership: Who was the leader?
• Supplies: Did they pack what they need?
• Equipment: Did they use specialized equipment?
Evacuation Learning Points
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Infant ResuscitationAirway Management
Positive Pressure Ventilation Neo-Puff
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Triage
• Who went first and why?• Traditional triage vs. TRAIN
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Triage and Tracking
• A systematic method for triaging inpatients is key to a successful evacuation
• A rational movement of patients from the inpatient unit to a staging point to transfer to another location/health care facility is necessary to move patients quickly and safely
• Traditional START system is approached in reverse by moving inpatients that are stable that will have first priority for moving off the unit
Pediatric/Neonatal Disaster Reference Guide — 2013“Bridging the Gap Between EMS and Hospital Care”
Resources Aid Development or Enhancement of Emergency Obstetrical, Neonatal and Pediatric Emergency Operations Planning
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What the Learners had to Say…
• In a disaster, always check your surroundings for equipment and supplies before the lights go out
• It was a wake up call on learning my environment...things that are so familiar are taken for granted
• The disaster scenario actually really helped me to recognize that I have a responsibility to my patient. It helped me to recognize what I need to do in a disaster
• The Disaster Simulation helped me feel more prepared
Teresa Doran, [email protected]
Karen Greeley, [email protected]
Adam Czynski, [email protected]
Teri D. Reynolds, RN, MSN, MHA, [email protected]
Thank You